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Squatter   /skwˈɑtər/   Listen
Squatter

noun
1.
Someone who settles lawfully on government land with the intent to acquire title to it.  Synonyms: homesteader, nester.
2.
Someone who settles on land without right or title.



Squat

adjective
(compar. squatter; superl. squattest)
1.
Short and thick; as e.g. having short legs and heavy musculature.  Synonyms: chunky, dumpy, low-set, squatty, stumpy.  "A dumpy little dumpling of a woman" , "Dachshunds are long lowset dogs with drooping ears" , "A little church with a squat tower" , "A squatty red smokestack" , "A stumpy ungainly figure"
2.
Having a low center of gravity; built low to the ground.  Synonym: underslung.



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"Squatter" Quotes from Famous Books



... the Missouri Compromise and providing for "squatter sovereignty" in the territories in question, outraged the North and led immediately to the forming of the Republican party. It was not long before public sentiment began to make itself felt, and the first demonstration ...
— A Social History of the American Negro • Benjamin Brawley

... repeated. "Are we not partners in this island? By squatter's right, if by no better title, we own land, minerals, wood, game, and even such weird belongings as ancient ...
— The Wings of the Morning • Louis Tracy

... tendency, both in commerce and agriculture, to employ one large capital, where several small ones would have been employed a century ago. The large manufactory, the large shop, the large estate, the large farm, swallows up the small ones. The yeoman, the thrifty squatter who could work at two or three trades as well as till his patch of moor, the hand-loom weaver, the skilled village craftsman, have all but disappeared. The handworker, finding it more and more difficult to invest his savings, has been more and more tempted to squander them. To rise to the dignity ...
— The Ancien Regime • Charles Kingsley

... great deal of play, with as much out-door life as he chose. He considered himself a true sportsman because he was 'fond o' huntin',' and 'took a sight o' comfort out of seein' the critters hit the mud' when his gun was fired. The neighbors called him a squatter, and looked on him merely as an anchored tramp. He shot and trapped the year round, and varied his game somewhat with the season perforce, but had been heard to remark he could tell the month by the 'taste o' the patridges,' if he didn't happen to know by the almanac. This, no doubt, ...
— Lobo, Rag and Vixen - Being The Personal Histories Of Lobo, Redruff, Raggylug & Vixen • Ernest Seton-Thompson

... we weren't sure to find out the truth. Calls him a squatter. Yes; the government made him squat ...
— First in the Field - A Story of New South Wales • George Manville Fenn


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